Wednesday, September 14, 2011

vintage image citrisolv fabric transfer {french tea towel tutorial}

A few months ago, a friend told me about this cool fabric transfer method using a cleaning product called Citrisolv. I had never heard of the stuff, but I was intrigued. I finally had a chance to track some of this stuff down and give it a try. Soooo glad I did. It's my new obsession. Just come to my house and take a whiff--the whole kitchen smells like oranges.

I wanted to try this technique to make vintage french-inspired tea towels. This is probably one of the fastest, easiest crafting projects in America (I would say the universe, but I don't know how easy it would be to find Citrisolv internationally or intergalactically--let me know where you find it in your corner of the solar system). In the US, you can find Citrisolv at health foods stores like Whole Foods, but my local store didn't have it. Imagine my elation when I found it at my Ben Franklin Crafts store! I knew I loved that store. I ended up with a stack of darling dishtowels in less than 30 minutes (and when I say a stack, I mean 16 of them!).

Citrisolv Fabric Transfer Tutorial

Supplies:
*Citrasolv Natural Cleaner & Degreaser and small bowl
*Fabric (I used flour sack dish towels. Note: the tighter the weave, the better the transfer.)
*Image copied on a copy that uses toner (inkjet printed copies will NOT work--go to your local copy shop where toner-based copies will run you around $.08-.10 each)
*Wide paint brush
*Spoon
*Stack of newspaper
*Scotch tape or sewing pins
*Iron
*Towel

I found these tea towels, or flour sack towels, in a 2-pack at WalMart. They used to sell them a 5-pack for $6, like when I was making a ton of these Christmas tea towels, but no more. The good news is the 2-pack is actually cheaper per towel--only $.98 each!

All the graphics I used on my tea towels were from the fabulous Graphics Fairy. LOVE her site. She posts vintage clip art and images for free each day. I went with vintage graphics because then I didn't have to worry about how well the transfer was made--if it wasn't perfect it would just add to the vintage look! Here are a few of my copies made at the copy store with their toner-based copier. Note: Inkjet home printers and color copies will not work. Be sure to use REVERSE image for anything with text, or it will come out backward! Some of The Graphic Fairy's are, but some are not. If your image is not reversed, open it in photo editing software and flip it horizontally before printing.

Be sure to work in a well-ventilated area. Lay your fabric out on top of a stack of newspaper. I actually only had a couple of sheets, so I put a few plastic grocery sacks under it to give some cushion. It's good to have a little cushion to make the burnishing easier later. Put your copy image-side-down on your fabric and tape or pin in place (you don't want it to move or you'll have a blurry image). Pour a small amount of Citrosolv in a bowl and have your paint brush ready.

Dip your brush in the Citrisolv and wipe over the image until you can see it. Be careful not to use too much Citrisolv--if you soak it you may make your image blur!

This is the step that will make your image transfer--burnishing. Rub the entire image with the back of a spoon, being careful not to miss any spots.

When you're sure you've covered it all, carefully life the copy off the fabric. If you do it slowly and notice you missed a spot, you may be able to replace it and burnish it a little further, but this is a good way to blur your image, so I wouldn't recommend it.

The last step I forgot to photograph, but now we need to heat set the image. Again, working in a well-ventilated area, place a towel over your ironing board (to protect it from smelling like Citrisolv!) and set your iron to the cotton or linen setting. Iron over the image to heat set it. And lastly, wash and dry it like normal to remove the Citrisolv completely from the fabric. That's it!

I did take a few extra minutes to add a little ribbon to a few of them, but again, this was a very quick addition. You can sew a straight piece of ribbon along the edge like on this towel:

I thought these would make a fun Halloween decoration, too, so I chose a couple of vintage Halloween images from The Graphics Fairy. Love this skull.

And this bat.

Here are a couple of other images I used for my french tea towels. . .

Can you see why I'm obsessed with this technique? Cheap, quick, and easy with gorgeous results. And wouldn't they make awesome handmade gifts for neighbors, birthdays, house-warming, etc.? My boys want to use that skull image on their annual birthday shirts instead of the appliqued numbers. Yes sir! And next fabric transfer project--pillows for my couch! Let's keep the Citrasolv flowing!

I have only washed my towels a total of 2 times, but the image has not faded one bit. I think it's pretty much locked in as long as you heat set it. If anyone finds something different, let us all know here!

My sister turned me on to this technique about a month ago and you're right, once you start it's easy to think of a million ways to use it. I just use our laser printer at home and it works great. I also used a paint canvas from Lowes and it gave the image a wonderful vintage quality.

So I tried this last night with goo gone and my laser printer from work - it didn't work at all. I think the problem may be the toner and not the goo gone. I'm going to try it again this weekend - this time with photocopies and goo gone. I'll let you all know if it works!

I heard another person say the FedEx Kinkos copiers don't work. I have no idea why! My best advice is to find a mom-and-pop copy shop (one that might have older copiers) and try that. I'm wondering if some of the older copiers use the right kind of toner and the new places have something a bit different that for some reason don't work. Good luck!

After finding a copier that made copies that would transfer and tracking down citrasolv......I made four towels to start, as a test. I was not pleased with the outcome. My transfers look mostly like the pic shown with old signage/wording. Not crisp as the knife/fork/spoon, whichI also tried - it's the crispest image.Still enjoyed the process of trying a new technique. And have about 30oz oc citrasolv - at least my house will be clean and smell like oranges !! :)

I did this project and heat set it with an iron as well. Washed them and my images were barely visible. Did I miss something. It seemed like such and easy project and the image was dark until I washed it. I didn't even use soap when I washed them in cold water.

For writing couldn't we use something we create in word, or in a graphics program? And I think it would be fun to scan in my own items, like my grandmothers silverware to put on my dishtowels, to make them more personal.

Hey guys! I realize this is 2014 and the original post was 2011 but I just came across this super cute, easy project and wanna give it a shot!:) I have a few simple questions..i found citrasolv in lavender which I will enjoy far more than orange lol! Surely the fragrance won't matter..i also saw that some walmarts now carry it but I found it cheaper on ebay! Score!:) what type of paper do you use? Just standard multi-purpose 20weight copy paper? I'm wondering if I set my printer on a darker setting if that may help with the 'barely visible' problem? How long do you heat-set? And personally I might like using a foam brush better..:) any tips surfaced in the last couple years? I like to see my options and know what I'm doing before I launch out on a new adventure and sink my ship from a simple mistake!;)

I tried this with copies from 4 different sources (staples, ups, my library and a local print shop) none of the copies transfered )-: Any more specifics on toner type, my local print shop is very helpful, if I have specifics about what I need. Thanks

@Jo Brown... Check out the following link on the Citra Solv website for printers that some folks have found to work: http://www.citrasolv.com/art/printers.html I found an older copier that uses powder-toner (at a local family owned printing business who typically does much larger jobs), and was able to get the images to transfer.

HOWEVER, has anyone else had trouble getting their images to heat set so they will not wash out in the washing machine?Tried this two different ways, with iron on highest setting and ironed the transfer for about two minutes.Most of the image has washed away, whatever I try. Any techniques or tips for getting the image to stay on through the wash cycle? Thanks!!

Hooray! I love mine! I used my mothers and grandmothers old handwritten recipes and transferred them to flour sack towels as gifts for Christmas. It did help to have my tech-savvy husband darken the text using Illustrator.